Green Border
Green Border is a 2023 drama film directed by Agnieszka Holland. The film is written by Holland, Gabriela Łazarkiewicz-Sieczko, and Maciej Pisuk, and stars an ensemble cast that includes Jalal Altawil, Maja Ostaszewska, Behi Djanati Atai, Tomasz Włosok, Mohamad Al Rashi, Dalia Naous, Maciej Stuhr, and Agata Kulesza. It dramatizes the plight of migrants caught in the Belarus–European Union border crisis. The film was an international co-production between companies in Poland, Czech Republic, France, and Belgium.
The film competed for the Golden Lion at the 80th Venice International Film Festival, where it won the Special Jury Prize. It received positive reviews from critics but was condemned by Polish government officials and by some segments of the wider Polish nation. It was released in Poland on 22 September 2023 by Kino Świat.
Plot
In 2021, a Syrian refugee family—parents Bashir and Amina, their three children Nur, Ghalia, and an infant, with Bashir's grandfather Mohamed—arrive at an airport in Minsk, Belarus. The group plans to cross the open 'green border' from Belarus to Poland, go through Germany, then meet a relative of theirs in Sweden. Leila, an English-speaking refugee from Afghanistan, accompanies them. Once the group arrives at the Polish border, they are forced out of their transport van and made to cross on foot into the forest. They are eventually found by the Polish authorities and forcibly transported through the barbed wire fence back to Belarus. In one altercation, the Polish guards throw a pregnant African refugee over the barbed wire, injuring her.Jan, a young soon-to-be father, is a member of the Polish border patrol. The commander instructs the guards to send all migrants back to Belarus, and that they are merely Belarusian International reactions to the [2020 Belarusian presidential election and protests|dictator] Alexander Lukashenko's weapons in an attempt to provoke the EU by opening the border. A recording of the pregnant woman being violently thrown over the fence hits the news, and his wife questions his employment as a guard. When not working, he renovates an old abandoned house, which he discovers refugees are squatting in when he isn't there. While patrolling at night, he and another guard discover the dead body of a pregnant refugee. Instructed to ignore the dead bodies of migrants at the border, the two dispose of her body over the fence. Jan, disturbed and conflicted, has an emotional breakdown in his car.
A group of activists who seek to aid the migrants find the group in the woods, providing them fresh clothes, food, water, and medical attention. Due to laws surrounding the exclusion zone and risks of human trafficking charges, the activists are unable to help the migrants any further. Once again, the migrants are taken back to the Belarusian border, where the Belarusian police threaten to open fire. During the scuffle, Nur and Leila escape into the woods.
Julia, a widowed therapist who lives close to the border, hears cries for help coming from the woods. She finds Leila and an unconscious Nur slowly sinking into deep mud in the swamp. Julia calls for help, but Nur slips completely into the mud and drowns. Leila is ejected from the hospital and detained by the Polish authorities; it is left uncertain what becomes of her. Traumatized by the experience, Julia decides to join the activists. They discover a Moroccan refugee abandoned in the woods with an injured leg. Unable to take him back on foot, the activists agree to leave him there overnight, but Julia returns alone in the night to find that he has disappeared, and she is arrested for entering the exclusion zone. After being released from jail, Julia decides she's never leaving anyone behind ever again. One of her patients, Bogdan, takes in several French-speaking teenage migrants from Africa, who bond with Bogdan's teenage children over a shared taste in music.
The Syrian family, devastated after Nur's death, come into contact with a human smuggler who conceals them in the back of his truck. They are stopped by two Polish officers, one of them being Jan. Jan inspects the vehicle and spots Bashir in the back of the truck, but he ignores him and lets them go.
In the epilogue, after the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Ukrainian refugees are shown entering Poland with ease, in stark contrast to the cruelty that the previous migrants were subjected to at the Polish-Belarusian border.
Cast
Production
Green Border is a co-production between Poland, France, the Czech Republic and Belgium. It was produced by Marcin Wierzchosławski, Fred Bernstein, and Agnieszka Holland. It was co-produced by Maria Blicharska, Damien McDonald, Šárka Cimbalová and Diana Elbaum, David Ragonig. The film is supported by Eurimages, the Czech Film Fund, the Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée, Sofica La Banque Postale Image 17, the Centre du Cinema et de L'Audiovisuel de la Federation Wallonie Bruxelles, CANAL+ Poland, Czech Television and ZDF/ARTE.Holland made the decision to begin work on the film in September 2021; she and her two fellow screenwriters, Maciej Pisuk and Gabriela Łazarkiewicz-Sieczko, "documented very deeply" when writing the screenplay, with this research including hundreds of hours of document analysis and of interviews with refugees, borderland residents, activists and experts, as well as testimony by anonymous Polish Border Guard officers. While Holland wanted to start filming as soon as the screenplay was finished, financial pressures meant that she had to wait a year to do so. It was decided that the film would be shot in black-and-white as it was thought that to do so would be "metaphorical, and somehow connected to the past, the Second World War, documentary-like", in addition to allowing for better visual and artistic control considering the shooting and editing schedule.
Principal photography was conducted between April and May 2023; it lasted for twenty-four days and involved three units. Many film crew members took "low or no salaries". Holland claimed that "verything that happens in the film is documented; nothing is invented", but added that she and the other filmmakers "did some construction" and that the film's characters are "inspired by real people but composed".
The film was produced by Marcin Wierzchoslawski, Fred Bernstein, and Agnieszka Holland. Cinematography was by Tomasz Naumiuk, editing by Pavel Hrdlička, and the music was composed by Frédéric Vercheval.
Release
Green Border was selected to compete for the Golden Lion at the 80th Venice International Film Festival, where it had its world premiere on 5 September 2023. Following screenings at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival, 2023 Vancouver International Film Festival and 2023 New York Film Festival. It was also invited at the 28th Busan International Film Festival in 'Icon' section and was screened on 7 October 2023. The film will be screened at the Vatican as part of the 27th Tertio Millenio Film Festival in November 2023, being announced as the winner of the festival's Special Fuoricampo Prize beforehand.The film was theatrically released in Poland by Kino Świat on 22 September 2023. By government order, "studio cinemas" seeking to screen the film were required to show a video presenting the government perspective on the border crisis prior to the actual screening. In Otwock, a cinema that was due to show the film later removed it from its schedule. Kino Oaza is run by Otwock's city council, which claimed that the cinema is often forced to change its schedule or suspend screenings entirely due to having to share its premises with a playhouse; however, the city mayor, Jarosław Margielski, is a Law and Justice member and so at least one councillor suggested the possibility of politically motivated censorship. As Kino Oaza is the only cinema in Otwock, the cancellation of its screenings of Green Border means that residents would only be able to see the film if they travelled to another locality. Agnieszka Holland retorted that Law and Justice ended up losing local elections in Ostrołęka after that city's council acted similarly to prevent screenings of Kler. In Kędzierzyn-Koźle, the Nicolaus Copernicus Second General Education Liceum was due to send its pupils to a screening of the film, but this was blocked by Law and Justice supporters whose children were enrolled with the liceum. The idea of a school trip to see the film was originally that of Marzanna Gądek-Radwanowska, a teacher at the liceum who also happened to be a Civic Platform candidate in the then-upcoming parliamentary election.
International sales are handled by Films Boutique. Distribution rights were purchased by Condor Distribution, September Film, Movies Inspired, Leopardo Filmes, MCF Megacom, and AQS, as well as by Vercine, Panda Lichtspiele, Kino Pavasaris, Art Fest, Magic Box, Fivia, Vertigo, Bio Paradis, Transformer Inc., Piffl Medien, Lev Cinema, Trigon, Moving Turtle, Danaos Films, Arthouse Traffic, Kino Lorber and Modern Films.
Reception
Critical response
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 93% based on 90 reviews, with an average rating of 8.3/10. The website's consensus reads, "With unyielding clarity, Green Border renders a compassionate portrait of the unmerciful landscape that flanks the Polish-Belarusian border." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 90 out of 100, based on 29 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".Non-Polish reviews
The Guardians Peter Bradshaw assessed the film as being a difficult but vital cinematic experience. Jo-Ann Titmarsh of the London Evening Standard praised Holland for unsubtly displaying her "righteous indignation", but not letting it overpower the film. Rodrigo Perez of The Playlist similarly called it a "righteous, masterful work, arguably her best since Europa Europa." Leslie Felperin of The Hollywood Reporter hailed the execution and precision of the film's multiple storylines, which she wrote "make for a bracing, impassioned skein of humanist cinema, old-school in technique but right up to the moment in terms of its subject matter." Screen Internationals Wendy Ide echoed praise of the film's "supremely confident handling of a fractured, fragmented structure and its twin driving forces of compassion and fury."In a less favourable review, Kevin Maher of The Times acknowledged the film as "expertly made, and harrowing", but criticized its dialogue as "podium-speak, ramming manifestos into the mouths of characters and transforming every scene into a Manichean struggle between the forces of darkness and light." Maher ultimately panned the film as being nothing more than misery porn, lacking the nuance of other modern refugee dramas such as For Sama, Flee and Tori and Lokita.
Polish government response
Government ministers
Green Border was consistently criticised by ministers from the Law and Justice-led Second Cabinet of Mateusz Morawiecki:- Zbigniew Ziobro, Minister of Justice, condemned the film ahead of its Venice premiere, writing on X that "In the Third Reich, the Germans produced propaganda films showing Poles as bandits and murderers. Today they have Agnieszka Holland for that." In a subsequent Radio Maryja interview, Ziobro further condemned Holland as having made herself part of Russian propaganda and disinformation and as "preparing a film that distorts the image and shows Poland from the worst angle." Some time after Holland announced that she would be suing him, Ziobro used a wPolscePL interview to make new comments, stating that his earlier comments were made deliberately, they were "exactly what I think", and he would not back down from them. In reference to Holland's threats to sue, Ziobro stated that the Last Judgement took precedence over any eventual court judgement and went on to accuse her of "reduc Polish soldiers border guard officers to the level of criminals and sadists" and of hypocritically comparing these and the Polish government to Nazis. He did, however, say that his comments were less about the film itself and more about Holland's views as expressed in interviews about the film, as well as admitting he had yet to see the film in person. When a court injunction was issued to prevent him from making further comparisons of Holland and her film to Nazi propaganda, he denounced it as an "assault on freedom of expression" and said that the judgement enabled Holland to "compare Polish soldiers and the border guard officers to bandits, sadists and German Nazis" while not allowing him to "respond to her words by standing up for the Polish soldiers and border guard officers who are so horribly challenged and insulted by her."
- Mariusz Kamiński, Minister of the Interior and Administration, branded the film as a "brutal attack on Polish uniformed officers defending not only Poland but also Europe" and as "consciously manipulat our emotions". In a later TVP Info interview, Kamiński claimed that the film was "a presentation of Holland's political views that has nothing to do with reality", that it was "intellectually dishonest and morally shameful", and that it downplayed the Belarusian angle. Kamiński stated his intention to make a further statement once the film had had its Polish premiere where " will show how this is a deceitful picture, this isn't an existent reality".
- Stanisław Żaryn, Secretary of State at the Chancellery of the Prime Minister of Poland and Government Plenipotentiary for the Security of Information Space, claimed that the film was repeating narratives presented in Russian and Belarusian propaganda, that said Belarusian propaganda was delighted by the film, and that the film was falsely painting Poland as condemning refugees to die.
- Przemysław Czarnek, Minister of Science and Higher Education, sarcastically thanked Holland for making the film and called it yet another phase of "spitting on everyone who risks their life and limb to guard the border twenty-four hours a day" and yet another example of what "that side represented by Gazeta Wyborcza" supposedly thought of Poland's uniformed services. He would later declare that, for "slandering Polish services, the Polish military, spitting on the Polish state", Holland and her "political helpers" did not have the right to call themselves Poles.
- Marcin Przydacz, Head of the International Policy Bureau of the Chancellery of the President, said it was obvious from the beginning that the film would present a biased view of the border crisis.
- Michał Dworczyk, Chief of the Chancellery, said that the film was "extremely dishonest" and was concerned not just with "presenting a false picture" but also with causing problems for and discrediting the Polish government.
- Błażej Poboży, Undersecretary of State in the Ministry of the Interior and Administration, said that the best way to describe the film was as a "disgusting libel" and that the film portrayed "those who risk their lives to defend the Polish border in an extremely unfair manner", was "harmful to the Polish state and to Poles", and contained "so many untruths and distortions". It was Poboży who would announce the government's intention to make independent "studio" cinemas show a short video on "elements that were missing in this film the context of the hybrid operation, the course of this operation, and the measures we have introduced to guarantee the safety of Poles" prior to screenings; in his view, the "most important element" missing from the film was any reference to Belarusian and Russian involvement in the border crisis.
Border Guard
On 8 September 2023, a union representing members of the Polish Border Guard's Nadwiśle division published a press release titled ""Green Border" - Only pigs go to the cinema" in which they lambasted the film as, among other things, being "a scandalous, anti-Polish film that glorifies the pathological phenomenon of illegal immigration", being a "propaganda product", and slandering the Polish state as an "inhumane dictatorship" and Poles who were patrolling the Belarusian-Polish border as "soulless guard dogs of an oppressive regime". The authors of the press release claimed that to distribute the film was to incur "disgrace and the deepest contempt" and, in criticising Holland's portrayal of engineers, doctors, and writers being among the migrants, challenged her to tell Border Guard officers that the thrown objects they were being attacked with were merely "calipers, stethoscopes, and pen nibs". The phrase "Only pigs go to the cinema" was originally associated with opposition to Nazi propaganda films screened in Poland during its occupation by Nazi Germany; its usage in the press release thus formed yet another part of efforts to compare Holland's work to such propaganda.Anna Michalska, a Border Guard lieutenant who often serves as a spokeswoman for the service, said that while the press release was merely the opinion of the union members rather than the actual Nadwiśle Border Guard division, many Border Guard officers were indignant at what she called a "shameful and harmful film"; likewise, she said that, while the Border Guard respects artistic freedom, the film did not have any factual basis. Michalska claimed that the film does not show the perspective of Border Guard officers, even though one of the principal actors portrays such an officer, and then went on to decry the film as being a "deliberately created offensive film which does not tell the reality" and to state that "as officers of the Border Guard, we firmly oppose all who slander the uniform". When asked if anyone from the Border Guard had seen the film, Michalska said that neither the film's plot nor its portrayal of the Border Guard were unknown; she then claimed to have personally seen the full film herself despite it having yet to be screened in Poland at the time of her statement and despite there being no evidence of a delegation from the Border Guard or the Polish state in general at the Venice Film Festival screening, and would repeatedly refuse to say how she had supposedly done so. When challenged about this on a later occasion, she insisted that she knew "every minute" of the film. In a later Polskie Radio 24 interview, Michalska again claimed that the film was pure fiction and that it showed nothing from a Border Guard perspective. She also said that the filmmakers did not consult the Border Guard with regards to the film; while this may be true for the Border Guard proper, Holland claimed during the Venice Film Festival that she did have input from individual Border Guard officers who contacted her anonymously.